Chakles c



c. c. TAINTOR.

Lamp Stove.

Patented July I6. 1867.

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N.PETEBS, FHOTO-LITBOGRAPHF-R. WASHINGTON D C A guitar lates gaunt @ffinr.

CHARLES C. TAINTOR, Y OF SPRINGFIELD, ILLINOIS. Letters Patent'No. 66,752, dated July 16, 1867; antea ated June 26, 1867.

APPARATUS FOR WARMING WATER BIZ PETROLEUM LAMP.

TO ALL WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:

Be it known that I, Cannes 0. Tnrsron, of nois, have invented anew and improved Water-W is a full and exact description thereof, reference reference marked thereon.

The nature of my invention consists in providing a c and K) or lamps, and screwing the same into the hott the sectional drawing'Figure No. 3.

E is a copper rim three-eighths of an inch thick, petroleum. K is a perforated burner, fixed on the to the burner and let down into the vessel I, to saturate Springfield, in the connty of Sangamon, in the State of Illiarmer (or Heater); and I do hereby declare that the following being had to the accompanying drawings, with the letters of em of a c lindrical co icr vessel or casin as shown in into which is let a tin vessel, I,-to contain the coal oil or p of the tin vessel I. A cotton band or wick is placed in in the oil, from which it is drawn up and adjusted to the burner the screw J. The cylindrical vessel A is made of sheet copper, one-sixteenth of an inch thick, four and one-eighth inches in diameter, and five and five-eighths inches deep from the top of the conical head G. In the interior of the cylindrical vessel A, and as shown in fig. 3, is fixed another copper vessel or boiler, H, and which has no opening or connection with the interior of vessel A. It is supplied with water by the pipes B and F, which pass from its inner side through and to the outside of vessel A into the water surrounding it. At the top of vessel A, and between its inner sides and the outer sides bf boiler H, are let pipes C G, to carry oil thesurplns heat from theinterior of vessel A through to the outside and above the water-line in thebath. As

the water in the boiler H becomesheated, it passes off and mixes with the water in the bath outside of the vessel A by the pipe B, which is attached to and opens into the top tom, and keeps the boiler supplied with the water of the coolest temperature of the bath. The pipes D D are attached to the sides of the vessel A, andcon'vey cold air to the interior at the bottom of it, as shown on drawing, fig. 3, to feed the burner on lamp. These heaters may be increased in size, so as to contain two, three, four, five, or six lamp-burners, according to the quantity of water to be heated, or, it required, boiled. A warmer with three burners eight inches deep and six inches in diameter will heat fifteen hundred gallons ofi water to a. temperature more than suflicient fora bath, by placing it when lighted in the water at t he bottom of the bath, in the space of five or six hours.

There is no dirt made 1) this warmer. All the smoke is consumed.

By its application much time, trouble, and expense is saved, more than by the application of any other method now used, particularly for large baths.

I claim as my invention, anddesireto secure by Letters Patent-' The lamp I, in combination with the air-pipes D D and eduction-pi'pes C C 0, when arranged to operate in vessel A in combination with boiler H, as shown.

CHARLES C. TAINTOR.

Witnesses ELISIIA HURT, WM. BILLINGTON.

ommon coal-oil or petroleum lamp (marked E, I, J, I

of boiler II, and thus warms the water in p the bath. The pipe F passes through the side of the boiler and opens intoit at the bot 

